What
is a life worth? What about one year of life? On the David Pakman show, two
stories made our crew consider this question.

On
March 11th, 38-year-old Staff Sgt. Robert Bales allegedly sneaked
out of his American military base and opened fire on sleeping families in two
nearby Afghan villages, totaling 16 dead and six wounded. Two weeks later, the
US paid $50,000 in compensation for each death and $11,000 per wounded.

Alan
Northrup was playing pool in 1993 when he was handcuffed and arrested for the
rape and kidnapping of a housekeeper -- a crime he didn't commit -- and spent 17
years in prison, before DNA testing exonerated him and he was set free.
Northrup left prison with $2500 and received no compensation from the state of
Washington, which isn't on the list of 27 states that provide remuneration for
wrongful imprisonment. Northrup also isn't eligible for many services that
paroled convicts can obtain because, according to Washington state agencies,
Northrup wasn't actually guilty of the crime he did time for, and therefore
doesn't fit the definition of a released criminal.

For
the 27 states that provide compensation to the innocent, payouts vary
significantly. Sometimes it's $50,000 per year, while a few pay more, and many
less. Wisconsin's rate is $5,000 per year, Missouri's is $50 per day. New
Hampshire's total benefit is capped at $20,000, and some states have a total
payout maximum of $500,000, $1 million, or no limit at all. By the way, Alan
Northrup also received a bill for $111,000 for the child support he wasn't able
to pay while in prison; his prison job only paid 42 cents per hour.

- Advertisement -

The
broader question is whether a year of life can and should have a value assigned
to it, and by extension, whether a single human life can be quantified in terms
of dollars. In the US, the following estimates have been applied to the value
of life:

$50,000 per year of quality life (international
standard most private and government-run health insurance plans worldwide
use to determine whether to cover a new medical procedure)

$129,000 per year of quality life (based on analysis of
kidney dialysis procedures by Stefanos Zenios and colleagues at Stanford Graduate
School of Business)

$6.9 million per life (Environmental Protection Agency)

$7.9 million per life (Food and Drug Administration)

$6 million per life (Transportation Department)

Not only is the value of life an
important issue for economics, healthcare, political science, worker safety,
insurance, globalization, environmental impact assessment, and countless other areas,
it also brings up many questions about how we value, prioritize, and think
about our society. This invariably links back to issues of political theory.
Without question, some would argue that the value of someone's life does
depend, at least in part, on how much value they are likely to add, in terms of
dollars, to the global economy during their lifetime. By definition, this
connects -- at least in some way -- to the salaries they earn. That gets us to
the question of whether people who earn more money are worth more as people, something that -- hopefully --
most disagree with. There's no question that this is a complex issue, as entire
books have been written analyzing individual aspects of valuing life.

- Advertisement -

Fortunately, in much of what is
colloquially called the first world, or industrialized nations -- both
admittedly obsolete and not particularly accurate terms -- the legal system
considers a life to be priceless, and this is reflected in slavery being
completely illegal; a person cannot be purchased. Systems other than the legal
system, however, do value life either explicitly or implicitly. In the "real
world," some limitations on resources exist, at least based on the current
allocation of resources, every life is not saved, and it brings up the question
of prioritization.

This drives the discussion in two
directions. The first is basic ethical dilemmas, the ones discussed in
philosophy, medical ethics, and other classrooms across the world, as well as
in a popular program segment on my broadcast, Morality with Motamedi. Included
under this heading are the infamous Trolley Problem (google it!), and countless
others.

The second direction is a real discussion
about the state of resource allocation as a planet. Increasingly, more and more
scholars ranging fields from economics and business to agriculture and environmental
studies are subscribing to the belief that scarcity for certain basic services
need not be the norm. In order words, with a real reorganization -- a paradigm
shift -- basic life requirements and services like healthcare, food, housing,
electricity, and running water would not need to be part of the free market,
abundant in some areas but almost nonexistent in others, but available to all.
The theory is that we have a problem of distribution rather than of resources.
One such set of ideas is contained in The Venus Project, if you're interested
in more reading. What do you think?

David
Pakman, host of the internationally syndicated political talk radio and
television program, "The David Pakman Show," writes a monthly column.
He can be reached at http://www.davidpakman.com.

David Pakman is the host of The David Pakman Show, an internationally syndicated progressive talk radio and television program airing on over 110 stations across 4 countries, on DirecTV, DISH Network, and across the web on a hugely popular podcast (more...)